The Last Garden in England(77)



Miss Adderton would be in a foul mood at the idea of having to magic a wedding breakfast out of thin air and thin rations—or maybe not. She’d seen the way Miss Pedley had stayed by Miss Adderton’s side when the telegram came.

Cynthia would be another matter.

“Are you sure it wouldn’t be a bother?” Miss Pedley asked.

“None at all,” Diana lied through a smile. Miss Pedley’s wedding breakfast was sure to become another battleground on which Diana and her virtuous sister-in-law squared off. “Well, I should leave you to your drawing.”

She was halfway across the garden room when Miss Pedley called out, “Am I giving up too much if I agree to move to Colchester after the war?”

Slowly Diana looked over her shoulder. “Love can make women do ridiculous things. Intelligent women become silly. They give things up they never intended…” She trailed off. “Just know that you can tell him what you want. You can demand what you need.”

“What did you give up for Mr. Symonds?” asked Miss Pedley.

Diana adjusted the trug so it sat higher on her arm before answering, “Everything.”



* * *



That afternoon, after she’d made her rounds to visit with the soldiers, Diana stood in front of the music room that had been reduced to storage when the hospital moved in.

She smoothed her skirt and then set her shoulders back. It was just a room. It didn’t think ill of her.

And yet, when she opened the door, the air felt thick with regret, like taking tea with a now-distant acquaintance who’d once been a dear companion.

Softly she closed the door behind her. The maid, Dorothy, must come to air the room out every once in a while; it smelled fresh and there was hardly any dust floating in the light through the gap in the navy curtains. And standing in the corner, just where she’d left it, was her harp.

She approached it as a rider might a shy horse. Her fingers grazed over the felt cover. She’d wanted this instrument with every ounce of her being when she was fifteen. She’d been talented. Her teacher had even encouraged her to study at a conservatory. She’d asked her parents for permission. Begged for it. Shortly afterward, she’d been sent to Switzerland to be “finished” instead.

Reverently Diana removed the cloth cover. The folds fell away, revealing the harp’s deep walnut soundboard and brass pedals. Pulling up a chair, she eased the instrument back against her shoulder, stopping to hitch her skirt up a little. With a deep breath, she placed her thumb to middle C and plucked.

A discordant twang rang out, making her jump.

“Of course it’s out of tune,” she murmured.

She nearly set the harp upright again, ready to cover it and leave the room, but then she spotted her son’s sheet music on the piano. If Robin could have music, why couldn’t she?

She retrieved her tuning fork and tuning key from the bookcase, then worked methodically, slowly bringing the harp back to life.

When at last the final string had been tightened to the right tone, she placed her hands to the strings and began a Leduc piece that she could have played in her sleep when she’d been practicing seriously. However, although she could still remember the notes, her hands had lost much of their agility.

She finished the piece, making a note to herself to oil the pedals, and then switched to a Schubert piece she’d once loved. Halfway through, she stopped to shake out her aching hands. Her fingers were moving at half the speed they had when she’d last played years ago.

When an hour later she covered her instrument and let herself out of the music room, she knew she didn’t want to wait that long again.





? VENETIA ?


WEDNESDAY, 24 JULY 1907

Highbury House

Hot and dry. Will rain ever come again?

I have neglected to write these last weeks, but could anyone fault me for it?

Being with child, I have learned, is a misery. Ever since Dr. Irving’s diagnosis, I have been struck down by nausea and fatigue, as though my body has now been given permission to betray me each day.

This morning, I found myself on my knees behind a buddleia in the children’s garden, trying to bring up the morning’s meager breakfast of tea and toast. I understand the irony of planting a garden meant to bring children joy when I am so miserable with my condition, but that is reason to move swiftly. I will show before my work at Highbury House is complete.

To think that I will never see this garden completed makes my heart ache, but an aching heart and an intact reputation is better than disgrace. I have a plan. Sometime in September, I will begin to feign an illness—what type I have not yet decided. It must be serious but not too grave, only requiring a period of uninterrupted rest and, if I’m lucky, a doctor’s recommendation of warmer climes. I will leave plans, detailed drawings, and plant lists for Mr. Hillock to finish the garden. Then I will take myself away for six or eight months to a place where I know no one and hire a discreet woman to help me with the birth. After arranging for the child to be placed with a family who will love her, I’ll return to England.

It is the only way.

Everywhere I turn, sacrifices arise. I have given up Matthew. There was no argument. No grand tragedy played out. Instead, I’ve stayed close to Highbury House. I no longer venture to the hedgerow, and if I must pass it, I keep my eyes resolutely on the ground in front of me.

Julia Kelly's Books